Athens News Agency: News in English (AM), 97-05-12
NEWS IN ENGLISH
Athens, Greece, 12/05/1997 (ANA)
MAIN HEADLINES
- Ruling PASOK party ready to reorganise
- Simitis: Turkey must match words to deeds
- Premier goes to Luxembourg today
- EU Commission to help Mount Athos
- Friday's marijuana haul largest ever in Greece
- One killed, two arrested in shoot-out with drug smugglers
- Woman's body found near Russian hitman's house
- Gligorov hopes name issue will not sour Athens-Skopje ties
- Kranidiotis in Moscow for talks
- Oymen may visit Athens later this month
- Olympiakos Greek champions after 10 years
- Greek First division soccer results/standings
- Weather
- Foreign exchange
NEWS IN DETAIL
Ruling PASOK party ready to reorganise
Prime Minister Costas Simitis's addresses on Saturday during ruling PASOK's
Policy Organising Sector Panhellenic Conference focused on unifying the
party and influenced procedures positively, the conference participants
said after the closing session yesterday.
During his speech at the conference on Saturday, Mr. Simitis stressed the
need for the ruling PASOK party to "obtain new characteristics, as it has
already turned over a new leaf".
He said that the party's reorganisation "is not simply an organising effort,
" stressing that although PASOK should not forget the past, it should also
look dynamically to the future "with new power and new ideas".
For this reason, he said, the party's reorganisation is tantamount to
"refounding and restructuring".
He said that in order for this to be achieved, "all powers must be
activated and reunited with the realisation that the (June 1996) congress
(in which Mr. Simitis was elected party president) is now history, and the
personal differences which arose must be overcome."
The Policy Organising Sector secretary, Mihalis Neonakis, described the
conference as "one of the most substantial and constructive procedures in
the history of PASOK."
He stressed that all those who had predicted a climate of disagreement and
conflict were proven wrong, as "in PASOK, politics, history, struggles,
solidarity and comradeship unite."
Simitis: Turkey must match words to deeds
Speaking on Greek-Turkish relations on Saturday, Prime Minister Costas
Simitis reiterated that Greece was not putting its sovereign rights up for
negotiation and was not questioning the status quo in the Aegean.
"The government's policy aims to reinforce our positions," he said.
"Greece differs from Turkey because it has a clear policy and positions
based on international law and international treaties, while Turkey is an
element of destabilisation in the ... area."
He reiterated that if Turkey proves it respects international law and
withdraws its expansionist intentions, then Greece will aid its course
towards Europe.
Turning to the forming of the committee of experts to discuss procedural
issues in Greek-Turkish relations, Mr Simitis said Greece aims to promote
an improvement in relations with Turkey, stressing however that the
committee will not constitute the begi nning of political dialogue, nor
will it have any mediatory qualities.
"This dialogue has two possibilities," he reiterated. "Either it will be a
turning point in Ankara's policies, in which case it will pave the way for
a peaceful course of both countries within the framework of the European
Union, or Ankara's true intent ions will be revealed."
"It is the Turks and not us who have the problem of proving that words
match deeds," he said.
Premier goes to Luxembourg today
Prime Minister Costas Simitis leaves today for Luxembourg accompanied by
Alternate Foreign Minister George Papandreou.
Mr. Papandreou said the working visit would deal with issues such as the
intergovernmental conference, Greece's important issues within the
framework of the European Union's common foreign policy for defence and
security, as well as other matters concer ning the EU.
Mr Papandreou also addressed a meeting in Thessaloniki of the World Council
of Hellenes Abroad (SAE) yesterday, announcing that during the next two
weeks, a proposal will be submitted for the drawing up of a bill to
regulate the SAE's operation.
EU Commission to help Mount Athos
European Commission President Jacques Santer has announced a Commission
decision to provide aid to Mount Athos during a visit to the autonomous
monastic community on Saturday, in recognition of "its great importance to
Europe".
He praised the spiritual tradition of Mount Athos, which he said could be a
model for the Europe of the future, and expressed his belief that the
provision of aid will be to the benefit of Europe as a whole.
Mr. Santer added that the monastic community's cultural heritage and
history have contributed to the creation of "a unique type of society which
is based on spiritual values."
Friday's marijuana haul largest ever in Greece
Police said on Saturday that the four tonnes of marijuana confiscated from
a container in a Piraeus port storage area in Piraeus Friday night was the
largest drug haul ever in Greece.
Initial reports on Friday put the haul at three tonnes.
The drugs, packed in 286 cardboard boxes, were found after police
authorities received a tip-off claiming a large shipment of marijuana was
due to arrive in the country from Cambodia.
The container, which according to its documents was carrying a cargo of
plates and flower vases, was unloaded from the "Mare" on March 19 and was
immediately placed under surveilance.
According to the export documents, the Phnom Penh-based "Delmex" company
sent the container to the "Alvita" company, owned by Petros Christopoulou
and based in Aspropyrgos in Attica.
Following a preliminary investigation, police suspect the shipment was
organised by Cypriot Eleftherios Pafitis, 40, who is believed to be a
permanent resident of Belgium.
When questioned by police, Mr. Christopoulou claimed Mr. Pafitis used his
packaging company, but that he himself was unaware of the marijuana
shipment.
One killed, two arrested in shoot-out with drug smugglers
One Albanian was killed and two arrested during a shoot-out at dawn on
Saturday between police and drug smugglers at Kalami, Plataria in
Thesprotia, northern Greece.
The gunfight erupted after three Albanians had reached the Greek coast by
speedboat and were hiding 20 sacks - a reported 500 kilos - of marijuana
which the police believe were to be picked up later by accomplices. However,
special police forc es and drug squad officers from Athens were lying in
wait. Two coastguard vessels also took part in the operation.
The other two Albanians are being held at Igoumenitsa coastguard headquarters.
The Greek authorities are now trying to determine whether the speedboat
used by the Albanians is the same as that used in recent attacks against
coastguard boats in the Ionian Sea. A later dispatch from Ioannina said the
boat had been stolen from Corfu.
Two Kalashnikovs were found in the speedboat which had been used by the
Albanians to fire at the police.
Woman's body found near Russian hitman's house
The decomposing and dismembered body of a young woman was found on Saturday
in a shallow grave three kilometres outside the southern Athens suburb of
Saronida, police said.
The body was found near the house of a suspected Russian hitman, Alexander
Solonik, who was found murdered in the northern Athens suburb of Varibobi
in early February.
The makeshift grave contained a suitcase with the woman's torso and a
travel bag with her head and limbs. The woman's internal organs had been
wrapped in a towel.
A coroner set the woman's age at roughly 20.
Police suspect the dead woman may be Svetlana Kokivi, 19, a former Miss
Russia who was reported missing three months before the discovery of
Solonik's body. Kokivi is believed to have been having an affair with
Solonik.
Gligorov hopes name issue will not sour Athens-Skopje ties
The president of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Kiro Gligorov is
"very optimistic and convinced that there will be better relations between
Greece and FYROM".
Mr. Gligorov was speaking at a press conference on Saturday for Greek
reporters invited to visit the neighbouring country by the FYROM ministry
of information.
Greece and FYROM have the same policy and aspirations on strategic goals,
he said.
"I would not want the relations between 'Macedonia' and Greece to not
develop and remain static only on the basis of the name issue," Mr.
Gligorov said, referring to "the only" problem in Greece and FYROM's
bilateral relations.
FYROM is in favour of a compromise on the gamut of bilateral problems and
it was in this spirit that the FYROM parliament passed two amendments to
the constitution earlier this year, one saying that the country has no
territorial designs on neighbours and the other which stresses the non-
involvement in internal matters of neighbouring countries, he said. Mr.
Gligorov said the New York interim accord of 1995 was an expression of this
spirit of compromise and stressed that his country's admission to the
United Nations came with the proviso that "the two countries must discuss
their differences on the issue of the name".
Kranidiotis in Moscow for talks
Foreign Undersecretary Yiannos Kranidiotis arrived in Moscow yesterday for
talks with Russian Foreign Undersecretary responsible for European and
Cyprus affairs Alexander Avdiev and with other Russian foreign ministry
officials.
Discussions will include issues of Balkan interest, the Cyprus problem and
Greek-Russian relations.
Mr. Kranidiotis will then travel to London, for talks with British
Undersecretary for European Affairs Sir David Hannay and other British
foreign ministry officials and discuss the course of the Cyprus problem and
issues of bilateral interest.
Oymen may visit Athens later this month
Turkish Foreign Undersecretary Onur Oymen, Ankara's main representative in
recent talks with Alternate Foreign Minister George Papandreou on the
formation of committees of experts to examine procedural issues related to
Greek-Turkish differences, will vis it Athens on May 26, it was reported
here Saturday.
Sources said Mr. Oymen had accepted an invitation from the Centre for
Political Research (KPE) to take part in a meeting on the issue of Greek-
Turkish relations and the European perspective of the two countries.
Olympiakos Greek champions after 10 years
Olympiakos Piraeus clinched the Greek soccer title for the first time in 10
years on Sunday with a 2-0 win over AEK Athens.
With two rounds to go Olympiakos, unbeaten for 17 matches, head the
standings with 78 points, 12 ahead of AEK. AEK trailed the leaders by nine
points before the match and needed a victory to keep their slim hopes
alive.
Greek First division soccer results/standings
Olympiakos-AEK 2-O Panathinaikos- Kastoria 7-0
OFI-Ionikos 4-0 PAOK-Xanthi 4-1
Veria-Kavala 0-1 Athinaikos-Paniliakos 3-0
Iraklis-Aris 1-2 Kalamata-Edesaikos 1-0
Apollon-Panahaiki 2-0
Standings: Olympiakos 78
AEK 66 OFI 65
Panathinaikos 60 PAOK 60
Kavala 55 Paniliakos 44
Ionikos 41 Iraklis 39
WEATHER
Sunny weather in most of Greece today with rising temperatures. Winds will
be northerly moderate to strong especially in the northern Aegean. Athens
will be sunny with moderate winds and temperatures between 17-30C.
Thessaloniki will be mostly sunny with temperatures between 15-28C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Friday's closing rates - buying US dlr. 268.544
Pound sterling 435.548 Cyprus pd 529.907
French franc 46.818 Swiss franc 187.205
German mark 157.797 Italian lira (100) 15.968
Yen (100) 220.293 Canadian dlr. 193.797
Australian dlr. 208.876 Irish Punt 408.188
Belgian franc 7.652 Finnish mark 52.372
Dutch guilder 140.472 Danish kr. 41.507
Swedish kr. 35.059 Norwegian kr. 38.117
Austrian sch. 22.446 Spanish peseta 1.871
Port. Escudo 1.569
(C.E.)
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